Looking at organized religion objectively, they are myths from
stone age societies that were trying to explain the world, and there is virtually no chance any one is truth.
Set in the far future, where humans inhabit a peculiar techno -
Stone Age society and robot dinosaurs stalk the earth, it tells a well - above - average story through the eyes of its protagonist Aloy, an agile huntress uncovering the grim narrative of the Earth's downfall.
Not exact matches
Can someone please explain then, how Leviticus, basically a book of iron
age rules for their
society (many of which call for
stoning to death as punishment), could possibly be meant in any other way than literally?
I would be more tolerent, but my understanding of history and
society demonstrates that people who live their lives by
stone age fairytales are screwing up the present as well.
There is still a perception in wider
society that Muslims are
stone -
age fundamentalists, locked onto benefits, bent on creating news with uncomfortable practices such as wearing the niqab.
Adult learning also carries different meanings for different
age groups: for younger
age groups, liberal adult education serves as a stepping -
stone to
society by increasing the feeling of being able to control one's life.
Skeletal remains of a group of foragers massacred around 10,000 years ago on the shores of a lagoon is unique evidence of a violent encounter between clashing groups of ancient hunter - gatherers, and suggests the «presence of warfare» in late
Stone Age foraging
societies.
It is likely that Paleolithic (the old
stone age which began 2.6 million years ago and ended 10000 — 12000 y ago) or Holocene (10000 y ago to the present) hunter - gatherers living in coastal areas may have dipped food in seawater or used dried seawater salt in a manner similar to nearly all Polynesian
societies at the time of European contact (53).
Over the millennia, the
Stone Age tribes huddled around the caves and hot springs of the Carpathian foothills developed into a cohesive
society, and eventually into the Dacian kingdom.
The latest title in Sid Meier's quarter - century - old strategy game series, Civilization VI, lets you guide a
society from the
Stone Age all the way up through the Space
Age and tailor every step along the way to suit your vision.
Take yourself back to the
Stone Age in this humorous take on early human
society.
(For those «coming in in the middle» — assuming any such are still reading — this subthread began with a link I provided discussing the vulnerability our complex
society bears WRT to very large volcanic eruptions, in the context of the robustness of some
Stone Age populations who «thrived» during the event — albeit at a considerable distance!)
The Onion looks at the issue as well, and notes that we should perhaps going back to the
stone age, where we can fulfill primal urges, in a pre-language
society where there is no nagging.